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Intermixing like a Smorgasbord

Postmodernism is a big melting pot, similar to America. Where you can find different cultures, beliefs, ideologies all wrapped up into one. After the first reading the introduction was very clear except for the introduction to Mr. Jean Baudrillard; but the next reading is all about him so that should help. The comparison between hyperreality and Disney World seems a bit dramatic? Why are they putting such a focus on this topic? I understand that Disney provides America with a sort of "Dream Land", but this article puts a negative twist on it for a place that people go to action and get away from their everyday realities.

Am I Colorblind?

Color mutants are among us-- women may have a spare set of x chromosomes can utilize the extra set to create a new yellow cone to create 1000s of new colors. You can look in a DNA test, you can see the gene for the 4th cone. When testing the woman, the showed 2 yellow lights that look the same to us but the lady with the extra chromosome didn't see a difference. But, rarely one of the woman could utilize the extra gene and saw two different colors. So naturally, even I thought twice... was this real, a tetracromat. After hearing about the lady, and the tests in the park it reminded me of when we stared at the white paper in the whitescape video... how we described what we originally labeled white as "a  blue toned white" and the woman did the same thing with the colors presented to her. This whole podcast made me come to the realization that I am color blind in a sense. No, not to the ROYGBIV rainbow but I am to ultraviolet and anything before and after our rainbow... I a...

Whitescape

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1. Find a white object and place it next to another white object. Compare how the two colors change. I chose the white platform at the bottom of my shoes compared to a white piece of crumpled printer paper. At first, they both appeared "white" but after staring for a while one obviously became duller and softer looking while the piece of paper was more vibrant and bright. 2. Describe the difference in color After further examination, the platforms have more of a warm vanilla tinge while the paper is a cool toned bright white. 3. Change the lighting and take note of how the colors change To change the color I simply put on my iPhone flashlight. The colors appear "purer" if that makes any sense, it may just be my eyes but the whites are both at their purest form. For the shoe i just see how the thin layer of dander and dirt have caused a tinge of warmness and on the paper the light reflected more blue toned to my eyes.

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BMA Extravaganza

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This piece named "Standing Odalisque" by Henri Matisse was my favorite one out of my three choose ones, I like it the best because of how realistic the woman's body is to an average American women today. It was honestly so refreshing to see a woman depicted with a normalized body instead of the stick skinny girls I see every single day on social media.  The texture and concept also caught my attention. It looks effortless and sophisticated due to the mix of the warm and cool colors added. The composition of this piece uses the vertical rule of thirds, L shapes, and I can even notice the golden triangle. There are leading lines that head towards the focal point which is the girl. My next favorite piece was the "Traveling Circus" by Paul Klee, it caught my eye immediately because of the dot detailing. What I love most about this piece is the fact that the background is just as interesting as the characters within the painting. There was a lot of beautiful scra...

Ways of Seeing

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After watching the first episode of John Berger's "Ways of Seeing" program, I found it quite interesting to experience  Berger examining the impact of photography on our appreciation of art from the past. It made me reflect and think about the impact of art now and the environment in which I most often view it. Everything is digital now in days, personally I haven't experienced Art in a traditional museum up until last week when I went with my Messina on a trip to the BMA. I really enjoyed that experience because the only thing I was focused on was purely the art, not my dog at my feet or the the tv playing in the background as I stare at some image of an old renaissance painting. Another piece of insight I took away was that uninterrupted silence that can lead to striking stillness. I completely agree with that and found this true at my recent trip to the BMA. He also talks about perspective and how taking pieces of art and zooming in/ ignoring other details can c...

Visibility

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After reading Visibility by Italo Calvino  I was left to think about where a lot of my inspiration comes from. After having a childhood and young adulthood full of extremely weird and unique dreams, I am wondering where they come from and why I wake up and remember them so vividly. Many of the times, my dreams incorporate random people that I seen during my day. It's as if my subconscious registers their faces and stores it as a short-term memory for later that night. I do keep a dream journal but I always just jot down the dream, I may begin trying to doodle/draw the visual dream. Stemming off the main idea in this short read, I have personal experience with imagining a design in my head and trying to make is come to life on screen. It's interesting the difference in the intended idea vs the reality of it.